Content |
|
Person(s) |
- Related
-
Antonios Malakes (13th c.) - VGH: 38.B - PLP: VII.16449 (monachos)
|
Date |
1276-1300 |
Origin |
Konstantinoupolis < Turkey |
Bibliography |
-
S. de Ricci, W. Wilson, 1935, Census of Medieval and Renaissance manuscripts in the United States and Canada, New York: 1109-1110
-
N. Kavrus-Hoffmann, P. Alvarez, 2021, A Catalogue of Greek Manuscripts at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (vol. 1), Ann Arbor: 90-102
-
A. Rhoby, 2018, Ausgewählte Byzantinische Epigramme in Illuminierten Handschriften, Wien: 495-498
|
Identification |
Diktyon (Pinakes), 00891
|
Comment |
Kavrus-Hoffmann - Alvarez (2021: 101): "The manuscript was executed in the last quarter of the thirteenth century in Constantinople in the small circle of calligraphers and illuminators who produced numerous codices of the so-called Palaiologina group. Robert Nelson identifed the scribe and the artist of Mich. Ms. 34 as two anonymous craftsmen who also executed cod, Vitr. 34/4 (the Four Gospels), Benaki Museum, Athens. (...) Soon after their execution both manuscripts were owned by Antonios Malakes, who was documented twice as an archbishop of Veroia." |
Occurrences |
|
Acknowledgements |
The credits system has been implemented in 2019. Credits from before the new system was in use might be incomplete.
|